South Brent (population 2,822) is a huge town on the southern edge of Dartmoor, England, in the valley of the River Avon. The parish consists of the little hamlets of Aish, Harbourneford, Lutton, Brent Mill, as well as numerous scattered farmhouses. It is five miles (8 kilometres) north-east of Ivybridge and 14 miles (22 kilometres) east-northeast of Plymouth. On the high moorlands are many hut circles, rooms, as well as barrows, all dating from the Bronze Age. The manor of Brent belonged to Buckfast Abbey from the time of the foundation of the abbey in the very early 11th century. It was purchased the Dissolution by Sir William Petre, a large receiver of monastic spoils in South Devon. South Brent was initially a woollen and also market centre with 2 annual fairs. Brent Hill is the high hillside simply outside the town where it takes its name (Old English brant-- steep). On it are the damages of an old building, intended to have been a chapel, and also of a windmill developed about 1790.